tr' iC $tOO Reward, $100. The readers of this paper will b« pleased to learn.that there is at least one area (led disease that science has been able to cure la all its stages, and. that la Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the ouly positive cure now known to the uaedleal fraternity. Catarrh heing_ a coustltutioual disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, thereby destroying the foundation or the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature in doing Its work. The pro prtetors have so mueh faith in its curative powers, that they offer One Hundred Dol­ lars for any case that It fails to cu-e. Send for list of testimonials. Address, b\ J. CHENEY A GO.._ TolUdo. b. Sold by Druggists, TBo. —One of the severest penalties to which criminals iu Holland were iu ancient times condemned was to be deprived of the use of salt. A Bis «r#gs Se...

I I I "•was Niw STdRE NEW GOODS NEW PRICES And are showing the Finest Line ol Herchanti, Bankers, Lawyers, fhvsiciaae ana all economical men wear W. L. Dtagln Shots because they are the but. For sate by B. LEVIN uiiiiiiimiuiuiuiumniuuummuuiiuu THE MESABA MEAT CO., Have -the Best Market and carry the Largest istoefc of s^MEATS ASALT of All Kinds of any firm on the entire range. Buy you Meats of them. Chestnut street, Virginia, Minn. HmiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiNiiiiiiim Bys and Baggage 'LINE.- &ETH SELLERS PPOPRIETOR. Makes All Trains. Passengers to and •from all parts of the city. Leave order* at Livery Barn. Virginia. Miun. FURNITURE fiver opened on the Mesaba, and at prices never before seen in St. Louis County. Calls Made Day and Night. VIRGINIA FURNITURE CO VIRGINIA MINNESOTA. I'S DRAY LINE LISHT AND HBAVY DBA¥IN«. FREIGHT AND BAGGAGE HAULED.——. ORDERS PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO. West Walnut street, Virginia. Minn. •MimtsmMw St. Paul's GtiurGh, Matins at 11 o'clock a. m. and ...

THE VIRGINIA ENTERPRISE VIRGINIA, MINN. W. E. HANNAFORD, Publisher. MIJ-Llil WSSBBBSSSamS^SSSSSBSSSSSOSSSt CbhlOUb CONDENSATIONS. —The word "fie," or its equivalent in sound, exists in all languages, and in every one is expressive of disgust. In the Icelandic the word "pfwi" means putrid­ ity. —It was Dr. Johnson who said: "A woman's preaching is like a dog's walk­ ing on his hiiul kg« it is not well done, but you are surprised to find it doue at all." —There is an old legend among the Greeks that says when rulers by the name of Constnntiu and Sophia shall come in power Greece shall conquer Turkey. —Some St. Louis women are not a bit particular. One was married to a freight conductor Saturday and they are now making a honeymoon tour through the Southwest in a caboose. —There was a large increase last year in the farm produce imported into Ber­ lin. The increase in butter alone is es­ timated at over a million sterling, and of cheese at a quarter of that sum. —A modern philosopher sa...

Discharge from Her Ears—Top of Her Head Broke Out in Scrofulous Eruptions, Grew Worse tinder Treatment Till Wo Gav® Her Hood's Sarsaparilla—She Has Rosy Cheeks Now. hen my baby was two months old she cried night and day, and seemed to bo in great pain. She had a discharge from her tars, and the top of her head broke out in scrofulous eruptions. The doctor save me something to stop the discharge and ease the pain, but his troatment did not cure her and She Grow Worse instead of better. The top of her head broke out with scrofula. A crust would l'orm on her head and fall off, taking the hair along with it. and this con­ tinued for two or three months, when something seemed to toll me to try Hood's Sarsaparilla, and I did so, to­ gether with Hood's Pills and Hood's Olive Ointment. Soon The Discharge Stopped and the sores were rapidly healing. In a short time her hair grew out and she now has rosy cheeks and is all right in every way. Mus. I. LLOYD, Spring "V alley, X. Y. Kemember, Hood...

THE VMM ENTERPRISE VIRGINIA, MINN. W. E. HANNAFORD, Publisher. CUBIOUS COMPENSATIONS. —An East Greenville, Pa., lady is sell­ ing taking powder as a menus of raising funds to purchase a bicycle. 'China has established a consulate at Warsaw, with the object of promoting trade between Poland and Manchuria, —The latest project in Switserland is that of a mountain railway to the sum­ mit of the Breithorn, next to the Matter horn. —The Austrian army has a new repeat­ ing rifle which weighs only 3.3 kilo­ grammes, as against 4.4 of the displaced weapon. —Berlin had thirty-one strikes last year, only eight of which were success­ ful for the strikers, of whom 124,616 were involved. —An official examination shows that a Per ceut* f,."TA of the pupils in the public schools at Minneapolis have de­ fective eyesight. •r»~~y**" Speakman, postmaster at No Business postoffice, in Morgan county, Ala., has been arrested, charged with em­ bezzling postoffice funds. —The percentage of tourists in Switz...

&• '.' -I -W e» INDIAN WISDOM. Their knowledge of the Cura­ tive Properties of Herbs considered remarkable. A noted Professor, Dr. €. ven Spiegel of Saratoga, Hf. Y., credits them frith many remedies used by him in elect* Ug difficult cores. Uaaful hints to many who suffer, where they might enjoy tha Indian's pro­ verbial good health and longevity but lor the prejndica of Ignorano& The once existing idea that no possible good or knowledge could be obtained from an Indian is fast disappearing. When such a man as Dr. C. von Spiegel of Saratoga Springs, in an article published 3n the daily Saratogiau of Sept. 14, states that he is indebted, not only to the North American Indians—Kickapoos, Choyennes, Arapahoes, Pawnees, Apaches, Kiowas, Com Anchcs, etc., but to the many so called uncivil­ ized nations of the most remote corners of the glolw,— for his enormous collection and theknowledgoof their virtues, of roots, herbs, barks, gntns and balsams, by whoso use ho has effected the...

THE VIRGINIA ENTERPRISE V1RQIN1A, MINN. V. HANNAFORD, PaWlihtr. MISCELLANEOUS 1TEMS~~] —The Russian scepter is of solid gold, three feet long, and contains among its or­ naments 2(S diamonds, 8(50 rubies and 15 emeralds. —The Phoenix umbrella is the state um­ brella of the Chinese, and is always used in the imperial processions, of which it forms a most important feature. —The chiefs of Africa are particularly foiul of umbrellas, and upon any special occasion you will be sure to see it pro­ duced with great state and ceremony. —A goldfish will die iu ninety minutes if placed in water which contains 1 per cent, of alcohol. In water which con­ tains 20 per cent, of alcohol it will die instantly. In Eastern countries the parasol or umbrella has always been used as a sym­ bol of royalty, and upon all state oc­ casions it is borne over the heads of the rulers or chiefs. —When the Prince of Wales visited In­ dia some years ago, it was found neces­ sary for him to be placed beneath a gold­...

Rest and Relief. A piece ot niachiuery run by steam and overworked will become crnnky, creaky and out of sear, owiug to some expansion of metal from heat aud fric­ tion. Stop its work, rub aud brighten «nd let it rest. In a short while it will le restored and will run smoothly. The human system Is a machine. Too much work and worry are thrown upon it too much of the heat of daily cares too much of the steam of daily business. The nerves become crauky they are restless, sleepless and twitehy, and a neuralgic condition sets lu. Pain throws the machiue out of gear and it needs rest and treatment to strengthen and restore. St. Jacobs Oil is the one remedy of all, peculiarly adapted to a prompt and sure cure. So many have so freely testified from experience aud use to its efficacy in the cure of neural­ gia that it passes without saying that it surely cures. It will be a gracious surprise to many after the free use of it to tind how easily pain, cares and worry may be lifted, aud how smo...

sdfc Wm: THE YIR6INIA ENTERPRISE VIRGINIA. MINN. W. E. HANNAFORD, Publish^, CURIOUS CONDENSATIONS. —At Liverpool over $21,000,000 is be­ ing spent on docks. At Bristol $7,500, 000 is to bo spent on harbor improve­ ments. —What is "the oldest village in the worldV" A writer in one of the Novem­ ber magaziues gives the honor to Ivil ear, in County Donegal. —The oldest cyclist in Vermont is R. M. Harvey of North Troy, who is 70 years old. hut is as enthusiastic over the sport as any younger rider. —A horse astonished the diners in a Newark (N. J.) restaurant the other day by jumpiug through the show windows and lauding in the dining-room. —In England more than 10,000.000 oil lamps are used nightly. They eause 300 deaths anuually. and in London alone Hv lires in a year have been traced to them. —Pew ladies consider that they carry some forty or fifty miles of hair on their head: the fair-haired may even have to dress seventy miles of threads of gold every morning. —In the jailyard of a ...

£'f 1 FROM WEALTH TO POVERTY. A MMiionatr* Hlaw Owti HI* DownlMI to Drink. Salton Cameron, & few years ago a millionaire miner of Montana, is now in the poorhouse at Deer Lodge, in that state, broken in health and In fortuue, Mr. Cameron made a prineely fortune out of the Cable gold mine in Deer Lodge oonnty In the early seventies. He was not the discoverer of the property, but was the fftst to discover its great rich­ ness. The mine was discovered by three sailors. They had been on the steamship, *reat Eastern, and were among the crew that landed the Atlantic cable. They sailed aronud the Horn to San Francisco, ami prospected eastward overland. In their travels they camped near a spring oa the present site of the Cable mine. In the water they saw "colors," and found several pieces of rich-looking float rock. They traced this up until they found the ledge, and located their claim, calling it the Atlantic Cable. Some time afterward Salton Cameron bought the mine for a trifling su...

THE W a ti-j: *«n,, YIBGIMA ENTERPRISE VIRGINIA. MINN. «. KANNAFOltD, PibllUitr. FOREIGN MOTES OF INTEREST. —Bishop Walsh, Anglican bishop of Ossory, who as a curate baptised Charles Stewart Paruell, has resigned from his see. —An Aberdeen jam and uickle manu­ facturer has bequeathed $2,500,000 for foreign missions, chiefly in Moravia, It­ aly and China. —Tomatoes have been grafted upon po­ tatoes by a French experimenter, whose hybrid plant produces tubers under­ ground and tomatoes above. —John Payne, the translator of the "Arabian Nights," has completed a met­ rical translation of all of Omar Khay­ yam's quatraiu, nearly 900 in number, which will be printed for the Yillon so­ ciety. Three-quarters of the work has never been turned into English before. —M. Osiris, who recently restored Jo­ sephine's Malmaison, has turned over 100,000 francs to the Paris press syndi­ cate to be used as a prize for the most meritorious work exhibited at the exhibi­ tion of 1900, judged from an artis...